I like food, maybe a little too much sometimes. About 35% of the food crops we eat depend on pollinators buzzing and flitting from one plant to the next.
In recent years, at the urging of my beekeeper friends, I have changed my gardening habits to be more bee-friendly. My yard is small, and I know this one act won’t change the world, but I feel good knowing I’m at least contributing to the pollinator ecosystem.
While bees are the most prolific pollinators, butterflies are important contributors. This month on Page 12, you can read about monarch butterflies, which are considered a vulnerable species.
Monarchs only lay their eggs in milkweed plants, which are becoming more scarce in the wild. I tried growing milkweed from seed last year, but my first attempt failed. But I’m stubborn and will try again using plant starts this time. Hopefully, I’ll have better luck. It would be pretty exciting to have my own crop of monarch butterflies.
Check out our story for ways you can make your yard more pollinator friendly.
Our Up Close feature this month on Page 10 highlights Gwen Trice and her quest to bring to light a former logging community in Northeastern Oregon, where her father and grandfather lived in 1923. Maxville was one of the few places in Oregon where Black people and white people lived and worked together.
Gwen is working to cultivate a healing and educational environment at the site. She also is restoring a historic cabin on-site.
Finally, check out Before You Go on Page 30 to learn how Ruralite readers pitched in to help a school put on a successful Family Math night.
Sincerely,
Mike Teegarden
Editorial Director